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(2013·高考湖南卷,C)It’s such a happy­looking ...

(2013·高考湖南卷,C)It’s such a happy­looking librarypainted yellowdecorated with palm­tree stickers and sheltered from the Florida sun by its own roof.About the size of a microwave ovenit’s pedestrian­friendlytoowaiting for book lovers next to a sidewalk in Palm Beach County Estatesalong the northern boundary of Palm Beach Gardens.

It’s a library built with love.

A year agoshortly after Janey Henriksen saw a Brian Williams report about the Little Free Library organizationa Wisconsin­based nonprofit that aims to promote literacy and build a sense of community in a neighborhood by making books freely availableshe announced to her family of four“That’s what we’re going to do for our spring break

Son Austinnow a 10th­graderdidn’t see the point of building a library that resembles a mailbox.But Janey insistedand husband Peter unwillingly got to work.The 51­year­old owner of a ship supply company modified a small wooden house that he’d built years earlier for daughter Abbie’s toy horsesand made a door of glass.

After adding the library’s final touches (装点)the family hung a signboard on the frontinstructing users to“take a bookreturn a book”and making the Henriksen librarynow one of several hundred like it nationwide and among more than 2,500 in the worldthe only Little Free Library in Palm Beach County.

They stocked it with 20 or so books they’d already reada mix of science fictionreference titlesnovels and kids’ favorites.“I told themkeep in mind that you might not see it again”said Janeya stay­at­home mom.

Since thenthe collection keeps replenishing (补充) itselfthanks to ongoing donations from borrowers.The library now gets an average of five visits a day.

The project’s best payoffsays Peterare the thank­you notes left behind.“We had no idea in the beginning that it would be so popular.”

1.In what way is the library “pedestrian­friendly”

AIt owns a yellow roof.

BIt stands near a sidewalk.

CIt protects book lovers from the sun.

DIt uses palm­tree stickers as decorations.

2.Janey got the idea to build a library from________.

Aa visit to Brian Williams

Ba spring break with her family

Ca book sent by one of her neighbors

Da report on a Wisconsin­based organization

3.The library was built________.

Aby a ship supply company

Bon the basis of toy horses

Clike a mailbox

Dwith glass

4.What can we infer about the signboard?

AIt was made by a user of the library.

BIt marked a final touch to the library.

CIt aimed at making the library last long.

DIt indicated the library was a family property.

5.The passage tells us that the users________.

Adonate books to the library

Bget paid to collect books for the library

Creceive thank­you notes for using the library

Dvisit the library over 5 times on average daily

 

1.B 2.D 3.C 4.C 5.A 【解析】本文是一篇说明文。文章为我们介绍了一个充满爱心、给读者带来便利的特殊图书馆。本文虽然是一篇说明文,但并不枯燥,如讲故事般娓娓道来。 1. 2.2】解析:选D。细节理解题。根据第三段首句“A year ago,shortly after Janey Henriksen saw a Brian Williams report about the...”可知Janey是受到一个报道的启发才有建图书馆的想法的,故D项正确。 3.3】解析:选C。细节理解题。根据第四段第一句“Son Austin,now a 10th­grader,didn’t see the point of building a library that resembles a mailbox.”可知该图书馆看起来像个邮箱,故C项正确。 4.4】解析:选C。细节理解题。根据第五段第一句“...the family hung a signboard on the front,instructing users to‘take a book,return a book,’and making...”可知,在前面挂上一个布告板是为了告知使用者“拿走一本,返还一本”,以避免图书丢失,从而使图书馆长久存在,故C项正确。布告板是the family制作并悬挂的,而不是使用者,故A项错误;B项“这标志着对图书馆的最后装点”与原文中的“After adding the library’s final touches...”相矛盾;挂布告板的目的是提醒使用者而非表明这是家庭的私有财产,故排除D项。 5.5】解析:选A。推理判断题。根据倒数第二段“Since then,the collection keeps replenishing(补充)itself,thanks to ongoing donations from borrowers.The library now gets an average of five visits a day.”可知,借用人捐赠了很多书,故A项正确。文中未提及使用者为图书馆收集书会有报酬,排除B项;C项中的receive应改为give;D项说“使用者平均每天去图书馆超过五次”,与原文“图书馆每天平均会有五次拜访”不相符。
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(2013·高考广东卷,C)One daywhen I was working as a psychologist in Englandan adolescent boy showed up in my office.It was David.He kept walking up and down restlesslyhis face paleand his hands shaking slightly.His head teacher had referred him to me.“This boy has lost his family”he wrote.“He is understandably very sad and refuses to talk to othersand I’m very worried about him.Can you help

I looked at David and showed him to a chair.How could I help him? There are problems psychology doesn’t have the answer toand which no words can describe.Sometimes the best thing one can do is to listen openly and sympathetically.

The first two times we metDavid didn’t say a word.He sat thereonly looking up to look at the children’s drawings on the wall behind me.I suggested we play a game of chess.He nodded.After that he played chess with me every Wednesday afternoon—in complete silence and without looking at me.It’s not easy to cheat in chessbut I admit I made sure David won once or twice.

Usuallyhe arrived earlier than agreedtook the chess board and pieces from the shelf and began setting them up before I even got a chance to sit down.It seemed as if he enjoyed my company.But why did he never look at me?

“Perhaps he simply needs someone to share his pain with”I thought.“Perhaps he senses that I respect his suffering.”Some months laterwhen we were playing chesshe looked up at me suddenly.

“It’s your turn”he said.

After that dayDavid started talking.He got friends in school and joined a bicycle club.He wrote to me a few timesabout his biking with some friendsand about his plan to get into university.Now he had really started to live his own life.

Maybe I gave David something.But I also learned that one—without any words—can reach out to another person.All it takes is a huga shoulder to cry ona friendly touchand an ear that listens.

1.When he first met the authorDavid________.

Afelt a little excited

Bwalked energetically

Clooked a little nervous

Dshowed up with his teacher

2.As a psychologistthe author________.

Awas ready to listen to David

Bwas skeptical about psychology

Cwas able to describe David’s problem

Dwas sure of handling David’s problem

3.David enjoyed being with the author because he________.

Awanted to ask the author for advice

Bneeded to share sorrow with the author

Cliked the children’s drawings in the office

Dbeat the author many times in the chess game

4.What can be inferred about David?

AHe recovered after months of treatment.

BHe liked biking before he lost his family.

CHe went into university soon after starting to talk.

DHe got friends in school before he met the author.

5.What made David change?

AHis teacher’s help.

BThe author’s friendship.

CHis exchange of letters with the author.

DThe  author’s silent communication with him.

 

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(2013·高考辽宁卷,D)“Indeed”George Washington wrote in his diary in 1785“some kind of flyor bughad begun to eat the leaves before I left home.”But the father of America was not the father of bug.When Washington wrote thatEnglishmen had been referring to insects as bugs for more than a centuryand Americans had already created lightning­bug(萤火虫)But the English were soon to stop using the bugs in their languageleaving it to the Americans to call a bug a bug in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

The American bug could also be a personreferring to someone who was crazy about a particular activity.Although fan became the usual termsports fans used to be called racing bugsbaseball bugsand the like.

Or the bug could be a small machine or objectfor examplea bug­shaped car.The bug could also be a burglar alarmfrom which comes the expression to bugthat is“to install (安装) an alarm”Now it means a small piece of equipment that people use for listening secretly to others’ conversations.Since the 1840sto bug has long meant“to cheat”and since the 1940s it has been annoying.

We also know the bug as a flaw in a computer program or other design.That meaning dates back to the time of Thomas Edison.In 1878 he explained bugs as“little problems and difficulties”that required months of study and labor to overcome in developing a successful product.In 1889 it was recorded that Edison“had been up the two previous nights discovering ‘a bug’ in his invented record player.”

1.We learn from Paragraph 1 that ________.

AAmericans had difficulty in learning to use the word bug

BGeorge Washington was the first person to call an insect a bug

Cthe word bug was still popularly used in England in the nineteenth century

Dboth Englishmen and Americans used the word bug in the eighteenth century

2.What does the word“flaw”in the last paragraph probably mean?

AExplanation. BFinding.

COrigin. DFault.

3.The passage is mainly concerned with________.

Athe misunderstanding of the word bug

Bthe development of the word bug

Cthe public views of the word bug

Dthe special characteristics of the word bug

 

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(2013·高考福建卷,B)Your glasses may someday replace your smartphoneand some New Yorkers are ready for the switch.Some in the city can’t wait to try them on and use the maps and GPS that the futuristic eyewear is likely to include.

“ I’d use it if I were hanging out with friends at 3 am.and going to the bar and wanted to see what was open”said Walter Choo,40of Fort Greene.

The smartphone­like glasses will likely come out this year and cost between $250 and $600the Times saidpossibly including a variation of augmented(增强的) realitya technology already available on smartphones and tablets (平板电脑) that overlays information onto the screen about one’s surroundings.Sofor exampleif you were walking down a streetindicators would pop_up showing you the nearest coffee shop or directions could be plotted out and come into view right on the sidewalk in front of you.

“As far as a mainstream consumer productthis just isn’t something anybody needs”said Sam Biddlewho writes for Gizmodo.com.“ We’re accustomed to having one thing in our pocket to do all these things”he added“and the average consumer isn’t gonna be able to afford another device (装置) that’s hundreds and hundreds of dollars.”

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“It’s just like smartphones 10 years ago”Weintraub said.“A few people started getting emails on their phonesand people thought that was crazy.Same kind of thing.We see people bending their heads to look at their smartphonesand it’s unnatural”he said.“ There’s gonna be improvements to thatand this a step there.”

1.One of the possible functions of the smartphone­like glasses is to ________.

Aprogram the opening hours of a bar

Bsupply you with a picture of the future

Cprovide information about your surroundings

Dupdate the maps and GPS in your smartphones

2.The underlined phrase“pop up”in the third paragraph probably means“ ________”

Adevelop rapidly

Bget round quickly

Cappear immediately

Dgo over automatically

3.According to Sam Biddlethe smartphone­like glasses are ________.

Anecessary for teenagers

Battractive to New Yorkers

Cavailable to people worldwide

Dexpensive for average consumers

4.We can learn from the last two paragraphs that the smartphone­like glasses ________.

Amay have a potential market

Bare as common as smartphones

Care popular among young adults

Dwill be improved by a new technology

 

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(2013·高考浙江卷,D)In 1974after filling out fifty applicationsgoing through four interviewsand winning one offerI took what I could get—a teaching job at what I considered a distant wild areawestern New Jersey.My characteristic optimism was alive only when I reminded myself that I would be doing what I had wanted to do since I was fourteen—teaching English.

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In college I had been taught that a successful educator should ignore bad behavior.So I didconfident thatas the textbook had saidthe bad behavior would disappear as I gave my students positive attention.It sounds reasonablebut the text evidently ignored the fact that humansparticularly teenagersrarely seem reasonable.By the time my bosswho was also my taskmasterknown to be the strictestmost demandingmost quick to fire inexperienced teacherscame into the classroom to observe methe students exhibited very little good behavior to praise.

My boss sat in the back of the room.The boys in the class were making animal noiseshitting each other while the girls filed their nails or read magazines.I just pretended it all wasn’t happeningand went on lecturing and tried to ask some inspiring questions.My bosssitting in the back of roomseemed to be growing bigger and bigger.After twenty minutes he leftsilently.Visions of unemployment marched before my eyes.

I felt mildly victorious that I got through the rest of class without cryingbut at my next free period I had to face him.I wondered if he would let me finish out the day.I walked to his officetook a deep breathand opened the door.

He was sitting in his chairand he looked at me long and hard.I said nothing.All I could think of was that I was not an English teacherI had been lying to myselfpretending that everything was fine.

When he spokehe said simplywithout accusation“You had nothing to say to them.”

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As the year progressedwe spent many hours discussing literature and ideas about human beings and their motivations.He helped me identify my weaknesses and my strengths.In shorthe made a teacher of me by teaching me the reality of Emerson’s words“The secret to education lies in respecting the pupil.”

Fifteen years later I still drive that same winding road to the same school.Thanks to the help I received that difficult first yearthe school is my home now.

1.It can be inferred from the story that in 1974________.

Athe writer became an optimistic person

Bthe writer was very happy about her new job

Cit was rather difficult to get a job in the USA

Dit was easy to get a teaching job in New Jersey

2.According to the passagewhich of the following is most probably the writer’s problem as a new teacher?

AShe had blind trust in what she learnt at college.

BShe didn’t ask experienced teachers for advice.

CShe took too much time off to eat and sleep.

DShe didn’t like teaching English literature.

3.What is the writer’s biggest worry after her taskmaster’s observation of her class?

AShe might lose her teaching job.

BShe might lose her students’ respect.

CShe couldn’t teach the same class any more.

DShe couldn’t ignore her students’ bad behavior any more.

4.Which of the following gives the writer a sense of mild victory?

AHer talk about symbolism sounded convincing.

BHer students behaved a little better than usual.

CShe managed to finish the class without crying.

DShe was invited for a talk by her boss after class.

5.The students behaved badly in the writer’s classes because________.

Athey were eager to embarrass her

Bshe didn’t really understand them

Cthey didn’t regard her as a good teacher

Dshe didn’t have a good command of English

6.The taskmaster’s attitude towards the writer after his observation of her class can be best described as ________.

Acruel but encouraging

Bfierce but forgiving

Csincere and supportive

Dangry and aggressive

 

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(2013·高考浙江卷,C)The baby monkey is much more developed at birth than the human baby.Almost from the moment it is bornthe baby monkey can move around and hold tightly to its mother.During the first few days of its life the baby will approach and hold onto almost any largewarmand soft object in its environmentparticularly if that object also gives it milk.After a week or sohoweverthe baby monkey begins to avoid newcomers and focuses its attentions on“mother”—the real mother or the mother­substitute(母亲替代物)

During the first two weeks of its life warmth is perhaps the most important psychological(心理的)thing that a monkey mother has to give to its baby.The Harlowsa couple who are both psychologistsdiscovered this fact by offering baby monkeys a choice of two types of mother­substitutes—one covered with cloth and one made of bare wire.If the two artificial mothers were both the same temperaturethe little monkeys always preferred the cloth mother.Howeverif the wire model was heatedwhile the cloth model was coolfor the first two weeks after birth the baby monkeys picked the warm wire mother­substitutes as their favorites.Thereafter they switched and spent most of their time on the more comfortable cloth mother.

Why is cloth preferable to bare wireSomething that the Harlows called contact(接触)comfort seems to be the answerand a most powerful influence it is.Baby monkeys spend much of their time rubbing against their mothers’ skinsputting themselves in as close contact with the parent as they can.Whenever the young animal is frighteneddisturbedor annoyedit typically rushes to its mother and rubs itself against her body.Wire doesn’t “rub” as well as does soft cloth.Prolonged(长时间的)“contact comfort” with a cloth mother appears to give the babies confidence and is much more rewarding to them than is either warmth or milk.

According to the Harlowsthe basic quality of a baby’s love for its mother is trust.If the baby is put into an unfamiliar playroom without its motherthe baby ignores the toys no matter how interesting they might be.It screams in terror and curls up into a furry little ball.If its cloth mother is now introduced into the playroomthe baby rushes to it and holds onto it for dear life.After a few minutes of contact comfortit obviously begins to feel more secure.It then climbs down from the mother­substitute and begins to explore the toysbut often rushes back for a deep embrace(拥抱)as if to make sure that its mother is still there and that all is well.Bit by bit its fears of the new environment are gone and it spends more and more time playing with the toys and less and less time holding onto its “mother”

1.Psychologicallywhat does the baby monkey desire most during the first two weeks of its life?

AWarmth. BMilk.

CContact.  DTrust.

2.After the first two weeks of their lifebaby monkeys prefer the cloth mother to the wire mother because the former is________.

Alarger in size

Bcloser to them

Cless frightening and less disturbing

Dmore comfortable to rub against

3.What does the baby monkey probably gain from prolonged“contact comfort”

AAttention.  BSoftness.

CConfidence. DInterest.

4.It can be inferred that when the baby monkey feels secure________.

Ait frequently rushes back for a deep embrace when exploring the toys

Bit spends more time screaming to get rewards

Cit is less attracted to the toys though they are interesting

Dit cares less about whether its mother is still around

5.The main purpose of the passage is to ________.

Agive the reasons for the experiment

Bpresent the findings of the experiment

Cintroduce the method of the experiment

Ddescribe the process of the experiment

 

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